C. Misinterpretations. Bickle recorded as Pekkel or person said Selma and recorder wrote Thelma, etc.

D. Phonic spellings. Phlaum recorded as Flamm, etc.

E. Lexicon/Linguistic factors (example: English long “a” is often spelled a, ay, au, or e, plus the nondescript sounds of “short a”. Even the letter position in a word can affect both spelling and pronunciation (try explaining how an English word spelled as “ghoti” would logically be pronounced as “fish” …Solution = enouGH, wOmen, naTIon)

E. New name when grown (Example: all sons named Johannes until “of age” then use only middle name so Johannes Adam becomes Adam).

5. Other

Depending upon how important you consider finding this person you will decide how persistent and how creative your analysis will become. Using systematic approaches should be attempted before using wild guessing. Here are a few systematic approaches:

1. Go to the basic plan of working from the known to the unknown and squeeze data.

2. Go to living relatives with the challenge of providing the last known name of ancestor.

3. Look at all possible records of the time and/or location when name last known

4. Look at records of people close in family, friendship, location and stretch connections.

5. Consult experts in genealogy, the family culture , locations, family languages, etc.